Fraser Institute News Release: British Columbia on track to be Canada’s third-most indebted province by 2029/30
September 10 2024 - 5:00AM
If the B.C. provincial government continues with its current fiscal
plans, it will become the third-most indebted province in the
country by 2029/30, finds a new study published today by the Fraser
Institute.
“In less than a decade, British Columbia has gone from having
one of the country’s best fiscal records to one of the worst and
this stunning turnaround will have serious implications for future
taxpayers,” said Ben Eisen, a Fraser Institute senior fellow and
co-author of British Columbia’s Descent into
Debt.
This study examines how this trend could affect British
Columbia’s standing amongst other provinces for future government
debt, and finds that since the provincial election in 2017, the
B.C. government has substantially increased spending and overseen a
rapid expansion in government debt. Nominal net debt was just $39.4
billion in 2016/17 and is now forecast to reach $226.8 billion by
the end of the decade.
In 2016/17, British Columbia had the second-lowest level of net
debt per person in the country, behind only Alberta, at just
$8,109. But following substantial increases in spending that began
in 2017/18, the government’s current fiscal trajectory is
forecasted to see debt-per-person reach $36,909 in 2029/30—a
staggering $28,800 in additional debt per British Columbian.
The province’s debt, relative to the size of the province’s
economy, was 14.9 per cent in 2016/17 and the third-lowest in
Canada. By 2029/30, B.C.’s debt-to-GDP is expected to reach 40.4
per cent.“In less than 15 years, the provincial government is
planning to increase the province’s debt, relative to the size of
the economy, by almost three times,” explained Eisen.
In fact, by 2029/30, British Columbia’s debt, both per person
and as a share of the economy, will be higher than Quebec, Ontario
and all three Maritime provinces.
“The deterioration in the health of BC’s finances has been
stunning. A decade ago, the idea that the province’s debt level
could eclipse debt levels in the Maritimes, Ontario, and Quebec
would have been difficult to believe,” Eisen said.
“As the data clearly show, however, this is exactly where the
province is heading.”
MEDIA CONTACT:Ben Eisen, Senior FellowFraser
Institute
To arrange media interviews or for more information, please
contact:Drue MacPherson, Fraser Institute(604) 688-0221 ext.
721drue.macpherson@fraserinstitute.org
Follow the Fraser Institute on
Twitter | Become a fan on
Facebook
The Fraser Institute is an independent Canadian public policy
research and educational organization with offices in Vancouver,
Calgary, Toronto, Halifax, and Montreal and ties to a global
network of think-tanks in 87 countries. Its mission is to improve
the quality of life for Canadians, their families and future
generations by studying, measuring and broadly communicating the
effects of government policies, entrepreneurship and choice on
their well-being. To protect the Institute’s independence, it does
not accept grants from governments or contracts for research. Visit
www.fraserinstitute.org